Electricity

EIB to ditch fossil fuel projects from 2021

Photo: EIB headquarters in Luxembourg (EIB)

Published

August 2, 2019

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

August 2, 2019

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

The European Investment Bank intends to stop funding fossil fuel projects from 2021, according to the draft of the EU bank’s new energy lending policy.

In the document, titled EIB energy lending policy – Supporting the energy transformation, the bank said that its activities would shift away from fossil fuel projects and focus on four separate themes – Energy efficiency, Decarbonising energy supply, Supporting innovative technologies and new types of energy infrastructure, and Securing the enabling infrastructure.

The EIB intends to stop funding oil and gas production, infrastructure primarily dedicated to natural gas, power generation or heat based on fossil fuels

“Focusing on this long-term investment represents an ambitious challenge for the bank. As a result, the bank will phase out support to energy projects reliant on fossil fuels: oil and gas production, infrastructure primarily dedicated to natural gas, power generation or heat based on fossil fuels,” the draft states, adding that these types of projects will not be presented for approval to the EIB Board beyond the end of 2020.

The EIB also said that its activities in the energy sector will be fully aligned with the Paris Agreement.

The proposed energy lending policy will be discussed by the EIB Board of Directors, made up of representatives of EU member states, in September. The Board must approve this new policy for it to take effect.

The EIB said that solidarity is required to ensure that potentially vulnerable groups or regions are supported.

Therefore, the bank will establish an Energy Transition Package to provide extra support to those member states or regions with a more challenging transition.

“This is the result of several months of work and it’s also a reflection of the views we have heard from hundreds of stakeholders across Europe as to what the priorities of the European Bank should be when it comes to supporting energy in the future,” said EIB vice president Andrew McDowell in a video statement.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Romania preparing to build giant AI hub data centers

Romania preparing to build giant AI hub, data centers

29 January 2026 - Romania is developing its Black Sea AI Gigafactory project, of up to EUR 5 billion, and several other investments in new technologies

montenegro TNC eco team mapping low-conflict solar wind potential

Montenegro identifies 16.3 GW of low-conflict solar and wind potential

29 January 2026 - The Montenegro Energy Growth and Acceleration project was implemented by The Nature Conservancy and Montenegrin NGO Eco-Team

Record battery installations EU 2025 Bulgaria enters top 3

Record battery installations in EU in 2025 as Bulgaria enters top 3

28 January 2026 - The European Union added 27.1 GWh of battery capacity last year, marking a 12th consecutive record – driven by utility-scale storage

croatia ante susnjar minister renewables subsidies jutarnji list energy conference

Šušnjar: Croatia allocated EUR 4 billion so far to boost renewables; subsidies for wind, solar to end

28 January 2026 - Minister of Economy Ante Šušnjar said at an energy conference that the money could have been put to better use